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LightHouse receives $125K donation, signs 10-year lease for downtown Holyoke building

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Efforts to create an alternative education program for teenagers in downtown Holyoke just received a large boost, in the form of a six-figure donation.

HOLYOKE -- Efforts to create an alternative education program for teenagers in downtown Holyoke just received a large boost, in the form of a six-figure donation.

LightHouse Personalized Education for Teens received a $125,000 donation from Philanthropist Gaye Hill. The Chicago-area native is a former member of the Hampshire College Board of Trustees and an advocate for alternative education programs.

LightHouse is an alternative education program that will offer students an individualized learning opportunity during their teenage years. The founders are Catherine Gobron, the current program director of North Star: Self Directed Learning for Teens, and Josiah Litant, an education consultant who formerly worked in the dean of students office at Hampshire College.

"Thanks to Gaye's generosity and vision, we are creating a beautiful and ideal space for teens in Hampden County who are inspired to pursue their educations in a whole new way," said Litant.

The school, set to open in September, will be the 12th program in Liberated Learners, Inc., which founded North Star and other alternative programs across the country.

Hill's donation will be used to build a new facility for the school.

Education officials have signed a 10-year lease for 3,500 square feet inside the Sustainability Technology Entrepreneurship Art Media (STEAM) building, 208 Race St., in Holyoke. The school will be housed on the second floor, which will be customized for the program.

"It has been a joy to work with LightHouse through the planning stages," said Lori Divine, of SPS Investments, LCC. which own the building. "We are thrilled to come to this long-term arrangement. It's an exciting moment in the Innovation District with new developments at Gateway City Arts and all along Race St. Things are happening fast, and we are enthusiastic about LightHouse coming to be part of it."

School organizers agree. "Innovation is happening in Holyoke. It's the right time to be there, to be doing something exciting," Gobron said. "We see the whole downtown area as a campus."

The school is open to 30-45 students between the ages of 13 and 17. While Holyoke residents and others in Hampden County are strongly encouraged to apply, the program is open to teens everywhere.

RELATED: LightHouse to offer alternative education for teens in Holyoke

Prospective students must apply, starting with a written application. Admission will be offered on a rolling basis, with school officials recommending they are in by June 15. After reviewing applications, they will meet with prospective students and their families, discuss what the student wants.

Tuition for the program is $10,000 per student, per year though financial aid will be available. Litant said they anticipate awarding scholarships to 50 percent of their families, at varying monetary levels based on need.

More information is available on the school's website


5 takeaways from Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse's campaign launch

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The Holyoke mayor's re-election kickoff remarks highlighted the improved economy, but included nothing about state seizure of the public schools.

HOLYOKE — His remarks took just 10 minutes, but the substance and setting of the speech showed how Mayor Alex B. Morse's campaign for a third term might play out.

Morse addressed a gathering of supporters Wednesday (May 27) at the Delaney House off Route 5 in a formal beginning to a re-election drive he has been discussing for months. Here are five takeaways:

1. It looks like Morse will wage a campaign of numbers in declaring the city economy is improving.

Holyoke's unemployment rate as of April dropped to 6.6 percent, down from 7.7 percent in March and 8.9 percent a year ago in April 2014. The statewide unemployment rate was 4.1 percent and the national 4.8 percent.

Gary Rome Hyundai is building a $10 million dealership on Whiting Farms Road that will produce 50 new full-time jobs and some part-time positions.

Marcotte Ford on Main Street is doing a $5 million expansion that will produce 16 new full-time jobs.

That's along with other seven- and eight-figure projects like the renovation of the former Holyoke Catholic High School campus on Chestnut Street into apartments, a passenger train station platform at Dwight and Main streets and upgrades to parks.

It would seem to be hard for Morse's opponents to argue that such numbers are bad things. But a key for Morse could be in explaining to voters why such developments should matter to them.

2. Was Morse trying to blunt the inevitable criticism he knows the re-election campaign will dump on him by noting that there will, in fact, be such negatives but that the only ones slinging them will be change-fearers who cling to the status quo?

Even as he seeks a third two-year term, Morse still is seen as an agent of change for various reasons: He is just 26, having taken office in January 2012 at 22; he shunned pursuit of a casino gambling project to boost the economy in favor of a multipronged plan that includes focusing on technology and the arts around the "Innovation District" downtown that includes the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center, with critics wondering how the city is benefiting; and as the city's first openly gay mayor – Morse's fiance Edwin Cruz Vargas was at the campaign kickoff – Morse is still unlike most politicians the scene has seen.

"Four years ago, we decided we wanted change and today, we see what change looks like," Morse said.

Elections go hand in hand with mongers of the negative, he warned supporters Thursday.

"We know that there are those who would bring us back to business as usual. Let's show all of them that Holyoke's best days are ahead," Morse said.

3. Morse speaks Spanish and has shown an appeal to Hispanic voters that previous candidates have been unable to muster, but his speech included nothing about that. This city of about 40,000 is roughly half Hispanic.

Will that be a factor in the race? Supporters of Anthony Soto, the Ward 2 City Councilor who is running for mayor, have made the point that Soto, who is of Puerto Rican descent, would be the city's first Hispanic mayor. Soto's announcement took place at Fernandez Family Restaurant at 161 High St. downtown, a popular place for authentic Puerto Rican food.

Another candidate for mayor, Ward 1 School Committee member Mildred Lefebvre, is of Puerto Rican and Cuban descent.

Francis P. O'Connell, owner of O'Connell Care at Home, also has declared a candidacy for mayor.

4. It was an eclectic crowd that turned out for Morse's re-election kickoff.

Here's a lengthy and incomplete list provided with the caveat that showing up at a politician's event – this was also a fundraiser for Morse – doesn't necessarily mean that those individuals will vote for that politician on Election Day:

City Council President Kevin A. Jourdain; councilors Gladys Lebron-Martinez, Jossie M. Valentin, Rebecca Lisi, James M. Leahy and David K. Bartley; Springfield City Council President Michael Fenton; Chicopee lawyer Victor M. Anop; Hampden County Sheriff Michael Ashe; Brian P. Lees, of East Longmeadow, the former state senator and former clerk of courts in Hampden Superior Court; state, Heriberto "Herbie" Flores, of Springfield, businessman and president of the New England Farm Workers Council; Historical Commission Chairwoman Olivia Mausel; Fire Commission member Christopher Hopewell and Patricia C. Devine; Kathleen G. Anderson, president of the Greater Holyoke Chamber of Commerce; Police Chief James M. Neiswanger; Police Sgt. Patrick T. Leahy; Building Commissioner Damian J. Cote; Planning Board Chairwoman Mimi Panitch; treasurer candidate Joshua A. Garcia; Ward 6 council candidate Mark Riffenburg; Adrian K. Dahlin, candidate for City Council at large; former Holyoke mayor Martin J. Dunn; state Rep. Aaron M. Vega; Rory Casey, Morse's chief of staff; and Morse aide William Glidden.

5. The mayor is chairman of the School Committee here, but Morse's remarks included nothing about the public schools and receivership.

The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education April 28 declared that the Holyoke schools were chronically underperforming and seized control of the system. That means local authority will be muted and a receiver will be appointed with complete control over decisions like hiring, firing and policy.

Soto, O'Connell and Lefebvre all have said they plan to target Morse about the state take-over, with Lefebvre saying Morse didn't fight off receivership hard enough.

Morse has said since he first announced he was running for mayor, while still a senior at Brown University in 2011, that his priorities would be public safety, education and economic development. He said he has worked hard on the schools and has dismissed speculation that he actually wanted the schools placed in receivership. Such allegations are "unfounded," Morse said, and "anyone who does any investigation will find that that's not the truth."

Mitchell D. Chester, commissioner of the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, also said that the speculation was false and that he alone recommended that the state board take over the Holyoke schools.


Southwick towing contractor facing 11 vehicle larceny charges due back in court

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A driver for JL Towing told police he hauled the vehicles away for Litwak without obtaining a title, registration or a bill of sale for any of them.

SPRINGFIELD - A Southwick towing company owner charged with stealing 11 vehicles in one month is due back in court Tuesday.

John Litwak, 47, president of JL Towing Inc., is facing 11 counts of motor vehicle larceny and three counts of stealing parts from a motor vehicle.

Litwak has denied the charges and is preparing for possible trial, according to his lawyer, who has received several delays in a case that dates back to February 2014.

The latest pretrial hearing, scheduled for May 1, was postponed to Tuesday due to a prosecutor's scheduling conflict.

The stolen vehicles - ranging from a 1993 Mercury Cougar to a 2005 Ford Ranger - were reported missing from parking lots and streets in Greater Springfield and traced to Litwak's towing and salvage lot on Sam West Road in Southwick, according to records filed in Springfield District Court.

A driver for JL Towing told police he hauled the vehicles away for Litwak without obtaining a title, registration or a bill of sale for any of them.

During an interview with police, Litwak explained the vehicles were towed for a black or Hispanic man in Springfield he knew only as KB.

Litwak never provided copies of checks, bank statements or other documents supporting KB's existence, according to Springfield police.

During a hearing in January, defense lawyer John F. Kavanaugh denied that his client stole the vehicles and said he had cooperated with police.

He described Litwak as an honest, if disorganized, business man who was duped by a dishonest customer.

If convicted, Litwak faces a possible prison term and fines up to $15,000 for each larceny count.

 

Your comments: Cathedral, Holyoke Catholic high schools renamed for Pope Francis

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield announced the new name of the combined Cathedral and Holyoke Catholic high schools on Friday: Pope Francis High School.

SPRINGFIELD -- The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield announced the new name of the combined Cathedral and Holyoke Catholic high schools on Friday: Pope Francis High School.

The name of the school was chosen by a group of Cathedral and Holyoke Catholic students working with school officials. The recommendation was accepted Friday by Springfield Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski.

While it may have been approved by Rozanski, public opinion is mixed on the matter.

A poll conducted by MassLive shows that most participants are against the new name. Close to 60 percent, 522 voters, said they did not like it. 356 voters, 40.5 percent, said they do. Hundreds of comments were made on articles covering the issue.

Some disapproved of naming the school after a living pope.

I would have preferred Pope Benedict XVI High School.  He was a good Pope and he isn't honored enough.  Another possibility would be Pope Pius High School.  We need to honor the popes from Europe's interwar and/or WW2 era more.  Naming it after a currently serving pope just seems like pandering.
PatriotLuvr said:

I would not advocate naming anything after a living person. If the Catholic Church is against naming it after one of the former schools, and is looking to name it after a pope, I would suggest, Pope John Paul II, who is known by everyone, and on well on the way to sainthood.

Named for the final Pope, who's to be the bad one.  Not a good choice.

Others say the name could allow for an interesting mascot. 

As a Cat High graduate, I feel a part of me has died. It wouldn't be fair to snub one of the schools, so it's probably better off with a new name. I don't know what Holyoke Catholic's mascot was and I really didn't particularly like the purple panthers, but it should be time for a new mascot. How 'bout the Cardinals, not the bird but the dudes that hang with the Pope
Pope Francis Hammers
Go with the West Ham logo and our fight song can be "I'm forever blowing bubbles". Best song in all of sports.

As reflected in the poll, quite a few like the name, or at least say it's time to come together as a Catholic school community.

teeitup2day said:

Some people in the community will complain about everything! Unless its called Cathedra,l and the mascot is the panther, and the colors are purple and white, they will complain, call others names, deride the Bishop, all in the name of Catholic education.
It is time to come together in the name of Catholic education in the Diocese and build a new high school. It wont be named Cathedral or Holyoke Catholic, it might not be on Surrey Rd, or it very well might be, that really is of no consequence in the long run. Students graduating from Pope Francis High School in 10 years will not complain that it isn't called Cathedral or Holyoke Catholic. They will only care that they have been properly prepared for their futures. 
Alumni of both schools, stop the bickering, the name calling, and support our young people and THEIR futures.
Very good choice. I am amazed at how little respect the Cathedral supporters are showing toward Holyoke Catholic. Holyoke Catholic currently has a higher enrollment.

Others consider the naming process to be a conspiracy. 

I think I've figured out their strategy. Intentionally choose a name that will anger and disenfranchise all alumni, and then announce rebuilding plans have been cancelled due to a lack of alumni support. 
POORboy14 said:

Wow, 3 years to pick a name. We are moving quick.

lxs36 said:

@POORboy14 It will be another 4 to decide where and then 3 to bulid.

participant said:

@lxs36 And by that time there will be no need for the school.

Low-income Easthampton residents still welcome at Northampton Survival Center

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The City of Easthampton has cut financial support to the Northampton Survival Center.

NORTHAMPTON -- Low-income Easthampton residents are still welcome to pick up free groceries at the Northampton Survival Center, in spite of the fact that Easthampton has cut its modest annual subsidy to the regional food pantry, said Northampton Survival Center Executive Director Heidi Nortonsmith.

For nearly a decade, Easthampton gave the Northampton-based non-profit an approximate $4,000 grant from its general fund. The contribution sits at zero in Easthampton Mayor Karen Cadieux's fiscal 2016 budget.

Cadieux's budget also completely eliminates taxpayer support to the Easthampton Community Center, a smaller food pantry in that city. Cadieux, in making her cuts to the charities, invoked the 1855 Anti-Aid Amendment to the Massachusetts Constitution, which prevents cities and towns from making direct cash grants to private schools, churches, and non-profits. Cadieux's cuts came as a surprise to the Easthampton City Council when they received her proposed budget on April 15.

Cadieux has since said that the city of Northampton should pitch with cash to help the Easthampton Community Center, claiming that Northampton residents often use the Easthampton facility. Cadieux has not provided any statistics to back up her claim.

In fact, numbers show that a good many Easthampton residents visit the Northampton Survival Center, which in 2011 cut the ribbon on a new, modern, expanded facility at 265 Prospect St.

Last year 863 Easthampton residents made use of the food pantry in Northampton, said Nortonsmith. Easthampton residents visited the Northampton Survival Center 4,400 times in 2014, she said.

"A lot of Easthampton people use our services, which is why it has made sense for Easthampton to help us out with a little money," said Nortonsmith, interviewed at Survival Center headquarters last week. Nevertheless, she said, Easthampton's contribution has only ever paid a fraction of the money needed to serve residents from that city.

A total of 4963 people were served at the Northampton Survival Center in 2014, according to the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts. That puts Easthampton residents at about 17 percent of the Northampton food pantry's caseload.

Nortonsmith said there is nothing wrong with Easthampton families availing themselves of groceries at both the Easthampton Community Center and the Northampton Survival Center. "People are just trying to feed their families," she said.

Easthampton pre-bags its groceries, and provides 11-15 meals per entire family per week, regardless of family size, said Nortonsmith. But the Northampton Survival Center provides 7 days of food per month for each family member, she said.

"Neither food pantry provides enough for people to live on," she said.

Thirty to 50 families come in every day for their monthly package at the Northampton Survival Center, said Nortonsmith. Then they may return on a weekly basis for supplemental fresh produce, bread, and milk.

Northampton's pantry is more commodious and offers a "choice" program, said Nortonsmith, as opposed to Easthampton, where people are given a pre-packed bag of grocery items.

The Northampton Survival Center, with its modern 4,000 square-foot facility, is a much larger operation than the Easthampton Community Center. The Northampton center operates with a budget of around $603,000, compared to around $157,000 for the Easthampton center. The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts in 2014 provided Easthampton with 114,534 pounds of food, while providing Northampton with 408,196 pounds.

Nortonsmith said that while the traditional $4,000 or so from Easthampton will be missed, it never really covered the cost of providing services to Easthampton residents:

"While the money Easthampton always provided us has covered only a fraction of the cost of feeding Easthampton residents, we would certainly be happy to see this money restored, as every bit helps," she said.

Nortonsmith said the Northampton Survival Center remains committed to serving 18 towns and communities in Hampshire County, including Easthampton:

"The drop in funding will do nothing to change our services, and we remain dedicated to feeding the many hungry people who come to us for help from Easthampton," Nortonsmith said in an emailed statement. "We've been grateful for the support we've received from Easthampton so far, and would love it if that funding could continue or resume in the future. In the meantime, we will not waiver in our commitment to feeding our hungry neighbors."

The city of Northampton in fiscal 2015 gave $10,000 to the Northampton Survival Center, but that money came from a federal Community Development Block Grant earmarked for helping low- and moderate-income people, said Northampton Mayor David Narkewicz. Easthampton does not qualify this year for Community Development Block Grants because of its demographics, said Easthampton Mayor Karen Cadieux. Cadieux said supporting the center through a CDBG grant would not violate the Anti-Aid Amendment.

Easthampton until now has been the only Hampshire County community outside of Northampton to provide municipal support to the Northampton Survival Center, which draws clients from around the region, including the hilltowns.

Nortonsmith said the Northampton Survival Center limits its clientele to its 18 member towns. If someone shows up from Holyoke, she said staff will politely turn them away and point them to resources in Hampden County.

"We don't try to feed the world," said Nortonsmith.

Robin Bialecki, director of the Easthampton Community, maintains softer boundaries. "If someone comes here from Holyoke, we will give them a bag of groceries and send them on their way. We don't turn anyone away hungry. But we will give them a list of resources in Holyoke and tell them that's where they should really be going," she said.

Bialecki said she also operates the region's only gluten-free emergency food pantry, which draws about 70 individuals from across Western Massachusetts.

Bialecki said that Cadieux's proposed $20,000 cut is painful for the small food pantry in Easthampton, but will not force her to close down. "I'll work without a salary if I have to," she said. The community is rallying with food drives and fundraisers, Bialecki added.

Both Bialecki and Nortonsmith said cash contributions are far more helpful than food drives, because the organizations can procure food at much cheaper prices than the ordinary consumer. For instance, the pantries can access food at the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts for 19 cents a pound, said Bialecki.

Bialecki agreed with Nortonsmith that it's OK for poor people in Easthampton to make use of both facilities. "If my family were hungry I'd do exactly the same thing," she said.

It's unlikely the Northampton Survival Center will see the restoration of funding from Easthampton any time soon.

At an Easthampton Finance Committee meeting last week, city councilors and Mayor Karen Cadieux began hammering out a tentative plan to restore partial funding to the Easthampton Community Center in fiscal 2017 through a contractual agreement.

Awarding a contract to the non-profit to provide emergency meals, instead of providing a direct grant, would not violate the Anti-Aid Amendment in the eyes of the state Department of Revenue, officials said.

There was no mention by Easthampton officials of restoring the cut to the Northampton Survival Center.

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com

The flip side for Gulf, East coast cities with years of no hurricanes? Good luck runs out

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Cities like Tampa, Houston, Jacksonville and Daytona Beach historically get hit with major hurricanes every 20 to 40 years, according to meteorologists.

OCEAN CITY, Maryland (AP) -- For millions of Americans living in hurricane zones on the Gulf and East coasts, recent decades have been quiet -- maybe too quiet.

Cities like Tampa, Houston, Jacksonville and Daytona Beach historically get hit with major hurricanes every 20 to 40 years, according to meteorologists. But those same places have now gone at least 70 years -- sometimes more than a century -- without getting smacked by those monster storms, according to data analyses by an MIT hurricane professor and The Associated Press.

These are places where people may think they know what to expect from a major hurricane --with more than 110 mph winds, such as Katrina or Andrew -- but they really don't. They are cities where building construction has boomed but haven't been tested by nature at its strongest. In the Tampa region, an Andrew-sized storm could cause more than $200 billion in damage, according to a local government study in 2010.

Few of Tampa's current residents witnessed the last major hurricane that hit there in October 1921. Movies were silent, booze was illegal and Warren Harding was president. For northeast Florida and southern Georgia, the last major hurricane was sometime in the 19th century.

"We've been kind of lucky," said MIT meteorology professor Kerry Emanuel, who along with the AP crunched numbers on how often hurricanes have hit metro regions and compared them to when the last time they were hit. "It's ripe for disaster. ... Everyone's forgotten what it's like."

"It's just the laws of statistics," said Emanuel. "Luck will run out. It's just a question of when."

Barack Obama, President Obama listens to National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb during his tour of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Thursday, May 28, 2015, to draw attention to preparedness in advance of the annual storm season that formally begins June 1. 

This hurricane season, beginning Monday, doesn't look to be as busy as past ones. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasts a 70 percent chance of fewer than normal hurricanes, mostly because of an El Nino weather oscillation. But even a quiet season can have one devastating storm hit. That's what happened when Andrew smashed parts of Miami in 1992; it was the second costliest hurricane on record, in a below average year for overall hurricane activity.

Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is preparing for the worst and worrying that other people aren't.

Inexperienced people "generally underestimate how bad it will be and made decisions about staying when they should be evacuating," Fugate said. "You have to accept the fact that every time a major storm threatens it's a new experience for 99 percent of the people involved."

And then there are the people who went through smaller storms and think that wasn't too bad and misjudge the bigger storm. In that type of situation, that thinking can "get you killed," Fugate said. "People don't always understand the threat."

Hurricane evacuation researcher Jay Baker, a retired Florida State University professor, said his studies and surveys show that people will still evacuate properly even if they don't have recent storm experience.

But it's not just people; it's the officials who have to make the tough decisions and tell people what to do. Only one hurricane-prone state, Louisiana, has a governor who was in office when a major hurricane hit. The FEMA top management is different than in 2005, when the last majors hit.

Fugate, who was Florida's emergency management chief during many state landfalls in 2004 and 2005, said "there are very, very few people who are working state government in Florida who were there in state government in 2004."

Experts are especially worried about the Tampa region. Emanuel calculates using past storm data and computer simulations that a major hurricane in general should hit Tampa every quarter century or so. The National Hurricane Center, calculating on past storms a bit differently, says a major hurricane should hit every 30 years or so. But it's been decades upon decades since the big one hit.

"It's a real big concern," said Christopher Landsea, science operations officer at the National Hurricane Center in Miami. "My worry is that we'll have hundreds or even thousands dead the next major hurricane that hits the Tampa Bay area."

It may sound like areas like Tampa are "overdue," scientists like Landsea and Emanuel say that's not a good word because the odds of getting hit don't actually change because there were no storms the year before. They are the same year to year.

"Hurricanes don't give a darn what happened the last year, the last 10 years," Landsea said. "We could certainly have a major hurricane hit Tampa-St. Pete in 2015 but it doesn't matter for this particular season that it hasn't had a hurricane since 1921."

For Houston the last major hurricane hit was 1941, according to the hurricane center, although smaller storms, barely under the threshold for major, have hit more recently and major storms have skirted nearby.

"I would be seriously worried about Houston, just because it's a huge petrochemical center with very large potential for a blended natural-technological event," said Kathleen Tierney, director of the Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado.

For Ocean City, Maryland, and down the coast at Norfolk, Virginia, it's been more than 160 years since they've been hit by a major hurricane. And while geography and currents make landfalls there rarer than Florida, it can happen and probably will someday, experts said.

"I feel like I live on the San Andreas fault," longtime coastal Maryland resident RuthAnne Grant said inside a hardware store on Memorial Day. "A lot of older people move up here without a clue about what's going to happen."

It has been more than nine years since the U.S. was struck by a major hurricane -- Superstorm Sandy did major damage but didn't qualify meteorologically as a major hurricane. That's a streak that is so unprecedented that NASA climate scientist Timothy Hall went looking to see if it could be explained by something that has happening with the weather or climate. He found that big storms formed, they just didn't hit America, coming close and hitting islands in the Caribbean and Mexico. The lack of hurricanes hitting the U.S. "is a matter of luck," Hall concluded in a peer-reviewed study.

Even though the Virginia, Maryland, Delaware area doesn't get as frequent major hurricanes as Florida or Texas, the traffic chokepoints and inexperience of people there worry Fugate, especially Norfolk.

"These are areas that haven't had a lot of hurricanes," Fugate said. "People tend to think, well, they don't have a hurricane problem. But it's a region that would be very difficult to evacuate."

At a disaster conference in Ocean City, Maryland's emergency management director Clay Stamp said he does worry about "a false sense of security" in the region because there have been several close calls with smaller storms that didn't hit in the past decade or so. But he added that watching major disasters in Sandy and Katrina from afar has helped make residents more aware of how bad it could get.

Stamp worries about tourists who look at sunny skies and don't pay attention: "We just need the public to stay connected. When they come to the beach, the propensity is to disconnect."

Hurricane center director Rick Knabb lives in a city, Fort Lauderdale, that hasn't been directly hit by a major hurricane since 1950, though Andrew came close.

"We should count our blessings that in any particular location, you've gone a long time without a significant impact," Knabb said. "It's not like hurricanes or tropical storms haven't happened anymore. They just haven't happened here or where you live."

Wilbraham & Monson Academy Class of 2015: Seniors from 7 states, 14 countries graduate

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The graduation was May 23 on the Academy grounds.

WILBRAHAM — Wilbraham & Monson Academy graduated 127 seniors on May 23, 98 percent of whom will attend college in the fall.

The class of 2015 came from seven states (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Florida, California, New Jersey and Alabama) and 14 countries (Turkey, Italy, China, South Korea, Angola, Thailand, Costa Rica, Japan, Vietnam, the Bahamas, Russia, Canada, Venezuela and the U.S.).

The following students graduated from area towns in Western Massachusetts:

From East Longmeadow: Andrew Goncalves, Brian J. Popovich, Aparna Sivakumar

From Longmeadow: Madeleine M. Duke, Caroline Hancock, Madeline E. King, Joseph M. Schneider, Benjamin Soder

From Springfield: Lucy S. Abramian, Shawn M. Boston, Alex Caldwell, Nicholas Nico Cotto, Robin M. Dillon, Roy Goodman, Kaylee Grabowski, Kirstyn P. Kelley, Dillinger Perez

From West Springfield: Tyler J. Dion

From Chicopee: Mecca Gonzalez, Evan Roy

From Wilbraham: Carolyn J. Cross, John C. Dowding, Andrew P. Faulstich, Margaret M. Harrington, Brian Kennedy, John T. Kirwan, William M. Kirwan, Andrew Mele, Matthew Naumec, Samantha Pajak

From Ludlow: Alexandra X. Baltazar, Veronica N. Bernardo, Victoria M. Bernardo, Austin T. Fabbo, Morgan Rodriguez, Julian Santos, Molly Socha, Ashley Theriault

From Westfield: Sarah Y. Bellefeuille, Sara K. Burke, John Tierney, Jacob Wood

From Agawam: Sophia M. Gourley and Benjamin Ochola

From Belchertown: Katelyn Mercer

From Hampden: Hannah Clewes, Nicole M. Cronin, Miles Nallen, Alexandra Stoll, Emily Zeno

From Monson: Andrew J. Dasco, Emily Moran, Luke R. Pelletier, Adriana G. Russell, Hope Williams

From Granby: Zane Kagan

From South Hadley: Cory Walton

From West Brookfield: Mary C. Callahan

From Somers, Connecticut: Emily J. Carson, Alina Shirley, Robert Taylor


German police alerted to report of armed mob find asparagus pickers instead

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Police in rural northeastern Germany rushed out to track down a reported mob of up to 15 people armed with knives and sticks. Instead, they found a group of asparagus harvesters.

BERLIN (AP) -- Police in rural northeastern Germany rushed out to track down a reported mob of up to 15 people armed with knives and sticks. Instead, they found a group of asparagus harvesters.

Police in the town of Ludwigslust said a man called their emergency number Saturday to report having seen "10 to 15 people armed with knives and sticks" on a local road.

Within minutes, six police cars were on their way to the scene. Officers quickly discovered, however, that the group was asparagus harvesters walking along the road with their work tools as they went to take a lunch break.

White asparagus is a popular delicacy in Germany and a ubiquitous sight on restaurant menus in late spring.


Do you know this man? Police looking for Ludlow bank robbery suspect

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Police have released surveillance photos of a bank robbery suspect they say held up a Bank of America branch on Cherry Street Saturday morning.

This is an update to a story first posted at 12:30 p.m.

LUDLOW - Police have released surveillance photos of a bank robbery suspect they say held up a Bank of America branch on Cherry Street Saturday morning.

Sgt. Daniel Valadas said the robber walked into the branch at 10:47 a.m. wearing a white baseball cap with a pink bill and a white "doo-rag" covering his ears.

"He was also wearing a black shirt with long white sleeves with the Birmingham Barons AL baseball team logo. On the back of the shirt was the name 'Jordan' and the # 45," Valadas said in a statement.

The man is described as white, possibly in his early 20s, police have said. He showed the teller a note, did not show a gun and fled on foot from the bank with an undisclosed amount of money.

Police are searching for the suspect and ask for the public's help. Anyone with information should call the Ludlow Police Department at 583-8305.

Edwin Alemany's attorney: Stabbing victim mouthed 'watch out' to her attacker

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Alemany's brother-in-law said a juror appeared to have inappropriate contact with Ballantyne, smiling and waving at her.

BOSTON - When stabbing victim Kayleigh Ballantyne was on the witness stand on Friday, she looked in the direction of her attacker, Edwin Alemany, and appeared to say "watch out," said Alemany's attorney, Michelle Hubbard.

"I observed her lips moving. She looked in the direction of me or Edwin and appeared to say 'watch out,'" Hubbard told Suffolk County Superior Court Judge Frank Gaziano on Monday.

Hubbard's comments came after Alemany's brother-in-law said a juror appeared to have inappropriate contact with Ballantyne, smiling and waving at her.

Gaziano and the attorneys questioned all the jurors individually before court started. Gaziano did not dismiss any of the jurors.

Alemany is on trial for allegedly murdering Amy Lord and assaulting two other Boston women. Alemany's attorneys have admitted in court that Alemany stabbed Ballantyne. They are using an insanity defense, arguing that he should not be held criminally responsible for his actions because of his state of mind.

Ballantyne testified Friday to Alemany attacking her at the door to her apartment as she came home from work and stabbing her multiple times.

Jose Centeno, who has been in a relationship with Alemany's sister for 15 years and has been a regular attendee at the trial, told Gaziano under oath that he saw a female juror on Friday trying to make eye contact with Ballantyne and smiling at her when Ballantyne was testifying.

Centeno said the juror was also trying to "lip" something to Ballantyne, but he could not see what she was mouthing.

"There were some gestures of the juror trying to get in contact with the victim. Trying to catch her attention, smile, make sure she made eye contact with her," Centeno said.

When Ballantyne left the witness stand, Centeno said the juror smiled and waved at her.

Assistant District Attorney John Pappas asked Centeno if he did not want to see an adverse outcome for his brother-in-law. "I just want a fair trial," Centeno replied.

Gaziano said Centeno was incorrect in comments he made about a juror switching seats. He also discounted Centeno's comments about sympathetic looks. Gaziano and the attorneys talked to one juror who fit Centeno's description for several minutes, then consulted among themselves privately. The woman remained on the jury.

2011 Tornado: The Republican's front page, extra coverage (Photos)

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The 2011 tornado that tore through Western Massachusetts and part of Central Massachusetts is fresh on everyone's mind as we hit the four-year anniversary.

It's been four years since a tornado tore through Western Massachusetts.

For some, it seems like it was just yesterday that the tornado -- which was on the ground for over an hour and a path of 39 miles -- crawled from Westfield to Charlton. Check out the front page of The Republican from June 2, as well as the Tornado Extra section, below, via The Republican archives.

tornado page 1.jpeg
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Fraud, money-laundering trial of ex-Lee Police Chief Joseph Buffis resumes in US District Court

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It is still an open question whether Buffis will take the witness stand in his own defense.

SPRINGFIELD - Testimony has resumed in the ongoing fraud, extortion and money-laundering trial of former Lee Police Chief Joseph Buffis in U.S. District Court.

Buffis is accused of fleecing a police-sponsored Christmas Toy Fund for needy children for $120,000 over more than a decade.

According to a 12-count criminal indictment, outside law enforcement agencies began scrutinizing the Laliberte Toy Fund after it came to light Buffis had encouraged a $4,000 donation to the charity from a Lee couple in exchange for shelving a prostitution investigation in 2012. Witnesses have testified that money quickly ended up in Buffis' pocket, as did virtually all the donations to pay his personal debts.

Buffis' defense lawyer, Lori Levinson, said her client spent money all year-round on the toy fund and simply reimbursed himself when donations came rolling in around the holidays. Levinson argued to jurors that Buffis kept shoddy records but is not a criminal.

The first witness to take the stand on Monday, the seventh day of testimony, was Alison Rada, marketing director for Community Health Programs in Great Barrington. She told jurors that in 2012, her agency took over Christmas toy distributions in Lee because the Laliberte Toy Fund was suspended that year.

"I called (Buffis) because I wanted to find out why families were coming back to us," Rada told Levinson under cross-examination, after explaining that the town of Lee had been exempted from their toy distribution in previous years because the Laliberte fund was dedicated to that town.

"In years before you hadn't been contacted by people in lee complaining that they had not received toys, had you?" Levinson asked.

"I had not," Rada said.

The testimony indirectly contradicted previous witnesses' testimony that they didn't know a single family in Lee who had received toys from the charity.

FBI Agent Michael Lewandowski is the second to have taken the witness stand this morning. He will testimony about the search of Buffis' home in Pittsfield on Nov. 19, 2012.

The Republican is in the courtroom and will provide updates of testimony throughout the day. The government is expected to rest its case by this afternoon.

It is still an open question whether Buffis will take the witness stand in his own defense.


V-One Vodka introduces grapefruit

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Founder Paul Kozub, the chief creator was inspired to create this unique combination after trying a grapefruit and tonic cocktail in Poland few years ago.

HADLEY - Valley Vodka, Inc. the owner of V-One Vodka has introduced a new flavor: grapefruit with a hint of lemon grass.

Founder Paul Kozub, the chief creator was inspired to create this unique combination after trying a grapefruit and tonic cocktail in Poland few years ago.

Kozub said in a news release:


"I am so excited to launch V-One Grapefruit, now our fourth flavor. I think it exemplifies my commitment to crafting 100% natural vodkas and using only the finest ingredients. It is fresh and delectable ingredients that deliver the best tasting vodkas. We are very excited to have created such a refreshing blend of two such great summer ingredients, grapefruit and lemongrass."

Kozub's news release also included tasting Notes for V-One Grapefruit

  • Nose: Bright, fresh, as if you were smelling a cut piece of grapefruit right in front of your nose. The real deal.
  • Palate: Soft and inviting with a natural grapefruit flavor, with an ever so soft lemon.
  • Finish: Sustained and refreshing with bright and clean finish.

As always, he also helpfully provided a cocktail recipe with the news release.

V-One Grapefruit and Tonic

  • 1.5 oz. V-One Grapefruit
  • 3.5 oz. Fever Tree Tonic Water
  • Build over ice into a highball glass, and garnish with lemon grass
  • V-One Mass Sipper
  • 1.5 oz. V-One Grapefruit
  • .5 oz. Elderflower Liquor
  • Splash of soda water and garnish with grapefruit

Desktop globe temporarily replaces Westfield State University sculpture damaged by students after Super Bowl

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Soon after the Super Bowl, videos were posted on Instagram and other social media sites showing a large group of people yelling and shouting as they rock the aluminum globe and, in at least two instances, climb on and into it.

WESTFIELD - When well-meaning commencement speakers tell college students that they live in an era when the globe is shrinking, this isn't necessarily what they mean. 

Someone has jokingly placed an everyday desktop globe on the concrete foundation on Westfield State University's green where a huge metal sculpture of the Earth and all its continents once stood. That work, a 1990 gift from the now-defunct Stanhome Inc., was damaged during the Patriot's Super Bowl win when students climbed on it.

Soon after the Super Bowl, videos were posted on Instagram and other social media sites showing a large group of people yelling and shouting as they rock the aluminum globe and, in at least two instances, climb on and into it.   

After noticing the damage, campus employees removed the battered sculpture from its perch on the green determined it was beyond repair.

There is a fundraising effort aimed at saving or replacing the globe, the big one. See the effort's Facebook page here, or the Westfield State University Alumni page here.

During the spring semester, students hosted events including a Mario Kart video game tournament and an ice-cream social to raise money.

Interim University President Elizabeth Preston promised to match $5,000 of the donations raised during a week-long fundraiser in April.

2-car crash closes I-91 on-ramp, lane in Northampton

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The best detour would be to get on the highway from Route 5 in Whately.

UPDATE: The right lane and the Exit 21 on-ramp are back open.


NORTHAMPTON - A two-car crash has forced the closure of one lane and an on-ramp to Interstate 91.

A van and a pickup truck pulling a small trailer collided late Monday morning near Exit 21 northbound. The right lane in that area is shut down along with the ramp.

State police said both drivers were taken to the hospital with possible injuries, which are likely to be minor.

Crews are working to clear the debris. The area could fully reopen in half an hour, a trooper estimated.

The best detour would be to get on the highway from Route 5 in Whately.

 


Holly Smith-Bove steps down as president of Springfield Museums

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"I'm proud of the positive growth that has occurred at the Springfield Museums during my tenure and I am confident that the organization will continue in the future," Smith-Bove said.

SPRINGFIELD — Holly Smith-Bove said on Monday she is stepping down as president of the Springfield Museums as the museum board embarks on a major capital campaign for a Dr. Seuss museum at the Quadrangle.

Smith-Bove of Florence, who has held the museum post for five years, said "after consulting with our board, we've decided that this was the right time to make that change.

"I'm proud of the positive growth that has occurred at the Springfield Museums during my tenure and I am confident that the organization will continue in the future," Smith-Bove said.

Board Chairman Samuel Hanmer said, on behalf of the board, "We want to thank Holly for her years of service and wish her every success in her future endeavors."

The Republican hosts meeting on fu. Seuss Museum in SpringfieldKay Simpson, vice president of the Springfield Museums, will serve as interim president following the departure of Holly Smith-Bove. (Michael S. Gordon / The Republican)

Vice-President Kay Simpson will serve as interim president while the organization embarks on a search for a successor.

The Springfield Museums announced in March that it will create the first museum dedicated to the life and legacy of city native Theodor Seuss Geisel, writer of the world-famous children's books.

"The Amazing World of Dr. Seuss Museum" is scheduled to open in 2016 at the William Pynchon Memorial Building, adjacent to the Quadrangle's Welcome Center. The world popularity of Dr. Seuss, development is expected to increase annual Quadrangle attendance by more than 25 percent.

The building, which was built in 1927, formerly housed the collections of the Connecticut Valley Historical Association.

With the input of the Davis Foundation, educators from the Springfield public schools and Square One early childhood agency, the museum will also be a place there children can practice the basic reading skills including letter recognition, vocabulary and rhyming.

Geisel was born and raised in Springfield and lived on Fairfield Street in the city's Forest Park neighborhood and attended local schools.

During Smith-Bove's tenure as president, the museums were awarded national accreditation by the American Alliance of Museums, the highest national recognition achievable by an American museum or consortium, according to a press release.

She also led the organization through a critical strategic planning process and helped establish innovative programs like the popular Culture & Cocktails series and signature events like the annual Lighting of the Quadrangle Celebration.


Smith-Bove was appointed to lead the Springfield Museums in 2010, succeeding Joseph Carvalho III, who retired after 34 years at the organization, 16 of them as president.

Prior to her appointment, Smith-Bove was chief financial officer and chief operating office of Motherwear, Inc.


Paradise of India in Amherst closed until further notice

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The restaurant is a frequent particpant in the Taste of Amherst

AMHERST — Paradise of India, a longtime Main Street staple, is closed, with simply a sign taped to the restaurant window reporting that it is "closed until further notice."

Attempts to contact Tarlochan Singh, listed as the president of the company with the Secretary of the Commonwealth's Corporations Division, or Kuldip Khinda, the restaurant director, were unsuccessful.

No one is answering the phone at the restaurant, which appears to be set for lunch.

The restaurant is a frequent participant in the annual Taste of Amherst and a member of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce.

Chamber Executive Director Donald Courtemanche said he didn't want to speak on their behalf without speaking to restaurant owners first.


Westfield police warn against Kik messaging app as they investigate elementary school sexting

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The Westfield police department is warning parents to keep an eye on their children's smartphone use after discovering a group of elementary schoolers sending and receiving naked photographs using the messaging application Kik.

The Westfield police department is warning parents to keep an eye on their children's smartphone use after discovering a group of elementary schoolers sending and receiving naked photographs using the messaging application Kik.

Some pre-teens have been trading extremely explicit photos, Police Capt. Mike McCabe said, with parents remaining unaware unless they make a habit of checking their childrens' phones.

"I can basically send anything I want to anybody I want at any time that I want, completely unfettered," McCabe said. "When used for a legitimate purpose, everything's OK. But, unfortunately, it's opened Pandora's box for us in terms of sexting."

Kik and similar applications like Whatsapp allow users to send secure messages over the internet. Kik requires users to be over age 13 and to secure permission from their parents if they are a minor, but avoiding that restriction is as simple as providing a false birthday when registering for the service.

The service has developed a reputation as a tool for sexting, because of its privacy controls and its anonymity -- users can communicate without revealing their real names or phone numbers. Kik has released guides for parents and law enforcement that encourage responsible use of the application, but accountability is difficult. Kik does not track the content of messages or the phone numbers of users, making it difficult for police to find identifying information in child pornography cases.

In the case Westfield police are investigating, criminal charges are unlikely to be brought as the users appear to be very young -- too young to understand the consequences of their actions, McCabe said. But adults can impersonate children on the application, leading to greater risks for children, he said.

"The intent of the investigation is to make people aware about how dangerous this is," McCabe said.

McCabe advises parents to either not allow their pre-teen children internet access on their phones or closely monitor their usage. Parents should know the passwords to their kids' phones, he said, and regularly check for inappropriate content.

"I don't think there should be any unfettered access to any internet application at all until at least high school," McCabe said. "You can think that your individual Einstein is mature enough to handle it, but they're not really mature enough to handle it."

Kik, started in 2008 by Canadian college students, has about 200 million users has has raised nearly $66 million. It announced plans in March to use photo recognition software to automatically screen out child pornography and report offenders to police.

4 more bodies found after Texas flooding

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At least 28 people have been killed nationwide in the storms, 24 in Texas.

ALLEN REED, Associated Press


DALLAS (AP) -- Authorities said Friday they reclaimed four more bodies from Texas waters, adding to the growing death toll inflicted by record-setting storms that continue to submerge highways and flood homes.

At least 28 people have been killed nationwide in the storms, 24 in Texas. At least 11 are missing in Texas.

More than 7 inches fell overnight from a line of thunderstorms that stalled over Dallas, which is in its wettest month ever recorded at 16.07 inches. The National Weather Service reports rainfall records have been crushed across the Lone Star state -- from Corpus Christi along the Gulf of Mexico to Gainesville near the Oklahoma border. Even Amarillo in the dusty Texas Panhandle is in its second wettest month on record, said Meteorologist Dennis Cain from Fort Worth.

The downpour has inundated a state that until recently was suffering a severe drought. Swelled rivers and lakes may not recede to normal levels until July.

"In a lot of places we've exceeded the wettest year ever," Cain said. "You're talking maybe a 150 or 200 year event. It is quite astounding."

The greater Dallas area was one of the hardest hit on Friday. Firefighters in the suburb of Mesquite recovered the body of a man who drowned in his truck after it was swept into a culvert. Houston-area authorities found the bodies of two men who had been reported missing.

The body of 87-year-old Jack Alter, who was swept away when a boat attempting to rescue him from a bayou overturned, was found in the Houston Ship Channel. The search for a missing 51-year-old man was called off Friday after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found a body on a southeast Texas beach that matched his description. The unidentified man and two others, who later escaped, had been fishing in the Brazos River Thursday when they were caught in the currents.

First responders said the body of an unidentified person was pulled near the banks of the Blanco River late Thursday.

A storm system last weekend that prompted the initial flooding also killed 14 people in the northern Mexico when a twister hit the border town of Ciudad Acuna.

The rain also seeped into homes Friday and stranded hundreds of drivers, many of whom lingered along highways that were nearly gridlocked from the high water and abandoned vehicles.

Fire rescue crews responded to hundreds of calls that included trapped vehicles and accidents, authorities said.

Exacerbating the problem for first-responders are people who have been going around barricades to take pictures of the floodwaters, said Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins. He said those people are endangering themselves and stretching thin the first responders' resources.

"Floodwaters are never safe to play around, take a picture around, walk around," Jenkins said. "We don't need any more loss of life."

The Colorado River in Wharton and the Brazos and San Jacinto rivers near Houston were the main focus of concern as floodwaters moved from North and Central Texas downstream toward the Gulf of Mexico. The mayor of Wharton, a city about 60 miles southwest of Houston, ordered the evacuation of homes along the Colorado River, which is expected to crest in the area at just over 43 feet on Saturday morning.

Floodwater was already creeping into neighborhoods in the suburban Houston city of Kingwood near the swollen San Jacinto River, where residents were keeping a close eye on water levels.

"Everybody's worried about it," James Simms said from his second-story balcony, looking down at a flood that had reached his garage. "Those people who are going to leave are already gone. There's others like us who are going to wait until it's mandatory."

Teams continued to search through debris piles along rivers. Over the Memorial Day weekend, the Blanco River tore through Wimberley, a small tourist town between San Antonio and Austin. County authorities on Friday identified the body of a 6-year-old boy who was killed when waters overflowed his family's cabin.

First responders with Texas A&M's Texas Task Force One from dawn until dusk combed a 25 mile area along the river since Sunday. Will Welch, communications manager for the Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service, said responders have been using search dogs to comb through tightly compacted debris piles constructed of Cypress trees, cars and bits of homes.

"Seeing a 10-foot in diameter tree stuck in the top of another that is 15 feet in diameter -- It looks like the most powerful tornado you can imagine (went down) either side of the riverbank."

Welch said responders have been taking the search acre by acre, combing through a precarious soup of snakes, bacteria, herbicides, insecticides and fuel and other hazards intertwined with the other debris.

"It's like the front end of a bulldozer just scoured the river basin and just wiped out everything in its path," Welch said.

___

Associated Press journalists Jamie Stengle Dallas; Juan A. Lozano in Houston; and John L. Mone in Kingwood contributed to this report.

Driver taken to hospital after Sunday night Amherst crash

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AMHERST – Police are investigating a one-car rollover accident Sunday night on South Prospect Street after a motorist driving a Hyundai struck a parked car and flipped over onto the car's roof. The driver was transported to Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton; no information about injuries was available. South Prospect is a one-way street between Amity Street and Northampton...

AMHERST - Police are investigating a one-car rollover accident Sunday night on South Prospect Street after a motorist driving a Hyundai struck a parked car and flipped over onto the car's roof.

The driver was transported to Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton; no information about injuries was available.

South Prospect is a one-way street between Amity Street and Northampton Road.

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